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  1. Overbrook is an historic neighborhood that is located in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, United States. It is situated northwest of West Philadelphia, Philadelphia . The area's housing ranges from large, old homes to rowhouses to three- and four-story apartment buildings.

  2. 12 de feb. de 2022 · Data Sources. Overbrook is a neighborhood in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania with a population of 36,027. Overbrook is in Philadelphia County. Living in Overbrook offers residents an urban suburban mix feel and most residents own their homes. In Overbrook there are a lot of bars, coffee shops, and parks.

    • (69)
  3. Coordinates: 39°58′37″N 75°15′54″W. Overbrook Park is a neighborhood in the West Philadelphia section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. It was founded in the 1940s on the site of a former farm known as Supio's farm, offering new housing for returning GIs and their families.

  4. Located in the farthermost section of West Philadelphia in relation to the central city, Overbrook was once a hunting ground for the Lenape Indians. In the 1680s enterprising Welsh settlers acquired tracts in this area that were part of William Penns Western Liberty Lands (Western Liberties).

  5. Overbrook station is a SEPTA Regional Rail station on the Paoli/Thorndale Line, located near 63rd Street and City Line Avenue in the Overbrook neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It serves many of the residents of Overbrook Farms and the suburban neighborhoods across City Avenue in neighboring Montgomery County , as well as ...

  6. Overbrook Farms is a neighborhood that is situated on the western edge of the West Philadelphia section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. It is roughly bounded by City Avenue ( U.S. Route 1 ), 58th Street, Woodbine Avenue, and 66th Street at Morris Park.

    • Keen & Mead et al.
    • 1893
    • 168 acres (68 ha)
  7. Overbrook. The neighborhood that today is Overbrook was once a hunting ground for the Lenape Indians; from the late 17th to the mid-19th century, a fertile, well-watered area of farmlands and stream-driven mills; and after the late-19th century, increasingly an area of residential housing.